we ;:”THE GUARDIAN Tova:-I Prluo lliud IIIIIA um to IIof' riinlinbod evuy week-Au: morning I! I3 Pnnu street uurlottnlnwu. PE.L tut lhl Thumuu Couuu LII. - V 04 King St. I.. Toronto. i . Iontrul Office. as Ulhmrily Iluwu III. . Editor. h-Ink Wain: Guianl MIIIIII. III A. land: llembu CInIdlII DItLy NGWDIDQ Publisher: uanciaucn Llembei of ma CInIdiIn Preu Mivmlxr Audit Bureau of Circulanunn lram-Ii ounce: II summertime. Iuuliutll Ind um-nu Anlhnriun In Second Clus III) by the Past Dina Deparunent. Ottawa. By i.Iii-in Cllallullulown aunimernme Sla.IIl pcl ll Ium Eluwhan in P la. L 8.00 Jam Pmvlncu Id U S 8l2.0I' pen annum "The Iifl)llS.l'iii memory II weaker than the walked ilk." WEDNESDAY. NOV. 3. I355 I I Mutual Aid 5 Some facts and figures just re- leased by ;he Council for Tectinical l C0-operation of the Colombo Plan give evidence of the worili ot tlhis experiment in international co-oper- ation. Following are a few of the actual accomplishments during the five years the Plan has been oper- . ating: In Cambodia ii workshop has been set up for training apprentices in railway work; Australia provided the equipment and New Zealand gave the money to erect the build- ings. An Austreiliiin surgeon has been touring India giving demon- strations on the latest techniques in various surgical operations. Canada is training Indian muses and some have gone from this country to help State officials with their child health programs. In Ceylon a training school for nurses specializing in tuberculosis treatment has been opened; nearby is I hospital with a Canadian super- intendent, an Australian assistant- superintendent. and a number of Australian staff nurses and techni- cians. A new vocational school in Indonesia is being maintained by Australian funds, and from Pakistan teachers have gone to Britain for specialized training in that field. The 17 countries making up the Colombo Plan organization have exchanged 400 experts and provided training for nearly 3000 students from Asian countries, The providing of experts has been the United States' chief cnntribiition. having sent out ap- proximately lflflfl. It must not be thought. however. that everything is being done by Western countries. The Asiatics themselves a r e co-operating in many ways to make the plan a sum- cess. India. for example. has assist- ed Ceylon in railway operation. water supply. parliamentary admin- istration, and many other import- ant. fields. Ceylon has been helping Burma set up co-operative associa- tions. The Indonesian Government has sent a number of fish culture ex- perts to India; in return, India has sent qualified engineers to Indon- esia. . surely,” apart altogether from the financial contributions" which make the Colombo Plan possible. these instances of mutual aid must be of some service in creating a bet- ter atmosphere. in the political and social relations of the peoples involv- .A Successful Experiment ' Are children from slum areas of the big cities as amenable to llfmll influences, when they are given the opportunity. as are their more fort- unate fellows? (Zourt records and opinions of social workers often dit- fer on this point. llowcvcr. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Drexel Duke lot the wealthy tobacco interests) have no hesitation in answering ”yes” And they should know; for they have qgnt a great deal of their time in the last several years. and immense sums of mone, in an experiment with boys-White and Negro-from the most underprivileged areas of 'New York City. areas which have a reputation for producing more than their share of crime and human dis- Irray. A report of their experiences gives one a renewed faith in human dignity and is, therefore, worth passing along. The Duke experiment is carried out on an I30 acre tract on Long Is- land called "Boys Harbor". Each summer a number of myk75 this year. an unusually large number- recommendediby church and civic groups. and recruited from the more undesirable areas, come to the camp ,for several weeks. There, they are gnibjccted to "a maximum of atten- lapd affection and I minimum of mlII.IniI regulItlonI." They Ire may be. From time to time they go fishing or on hiking trips; and, for some time each day, they help Mr. Duke clear brush for a new trail or do whatever needs to be done around the place. On Sundays the boys go to the nearest toivn for Church services. There is no mori- regimentation than is absolutely necessary. Each boy is told on ar- rival that he is expected to be a "good camper". How does it work out? This is what one visitor says about it: ”The boys have acquired the manners of the best private schools. They are friendly, well-spoken, and at ease. Above all. they are proud of having been selected to attend Boys Hal'- bor. The privilego of being asked to come back for another year is some- thing for which they have workcd hard all summer”. Thus far. the re- port says. more than 300 boys have been guests at the Harbor. Of this number only ill have had to be sent home for anti-social behaviour. and only one has later acquired a police record. This one failure worries Mr. Duke; "we have friilcd the boy somehow". he told the visitor. In the off-season Mr. and Mrs. Duke con- sult with various experts on more efficient methods of ironing out emotional distiirbaiiccs among their summer guests. Booming Beersheba In Biblical times ”From Dan to Beersiheba" meant the full reach of the old Israelite kingdom. north to south. Today, young Isrlicl calls its boom-town Bcershcba the beginning of the southern frontier-the Negev territory that covers nearly 5.000 square miles of challenging dcscrt beyond. Beerslicba lies almost in the heart. of irregular, elongated lsrzicl. says the National Geographic So- ciety. Roughly lililfwziy between the Meditei'rlliicaii on the nest and the Dead Sea on the east. it commands in road-aiid-trail hub strategic in war and trade for countless cen- turies. During the Arab-Israel war of 1948, it was taken from Egyptian forces in the Israel sweep through the Negev. Its several thousand Arab inhabitants fled, leaving bu- hind the skeleton of a town. Seven years and an intensive de- velopment program have changed Bceisheba beyond recognition. It is now a city of 20,fl0(l people. Except for a few nomad Bedouin tribes- men drifting into town for supplies, virtually the entire population is Israeli. Carpenters, plumbers. fac- tory hands, leclinicians, teachers. doctors. and engineers are building and serving an increasingly urban and industrial center. Beerslicba's atmosphere, visitors say. has the tang of a frontier settlement of the old American West. Only instead of saddle-and- wagon horses hitched to posts, the Near East streets are lined with parked triicks. cars, taxis and army jeeps. its old mosque still stands, its minarrl a liigli point against the sky. But iicurly evcrytliing else is new. from prcflibriclitcd homes to stores. banks, Syn.'IiI0gll0S, hotels, movies and hospital. The ncii liluliuzris streak east and south from llciwsliclia, tapping Dead Sea i'csniii'ccs reaching Negev outlet at the Gulf of Aqiuihu. Plfforts to make the ties- ert prodiictive l'l'i';lll ancient. settle- ini-nts that prnspcirrl in this un- likely rcgioii. South of Beersheba lie ruins of the ingenious dew-catching rock piles of an energetic people who once farmed successfully there. Near by, Abraham grazed his flocks, and on the Beersheba site the Patriarch and Abimelech, King of Gerar, made their covenant (Gene- sis 21:22) to live together in peace. I EDITORIAL notes - 4 An American scientist says that scientists generally now recognize .the destructive power of the atom. They'd better! I I A spokesman for an electrical firm predicts that by 1956 there will be at least one television set In e v e r y American and Canadian home. Less essential articles of fur- niture presumably will have to wait I little longer. 0 O O The United States Civil Defense Administration reports it' ill work- ing on I device that will alert 9999 . H the populhtton in the event of p dim! III: Ituck. Apparently that 1;-mun I&tlthe remaining 195 will ; g h.Ut"D their own devices. at Sodom, and . .. .1 .. .,..-. - .. . i.-QED...5T9.liY.- An Ahen Hoot' mm. -c Bruce Hutchlsun in the Wfnnipeg For-9 Press Tile iiliulc Scots race, most of ; iiliicli is in Canada. of course. with i a small auxiliary force and over- seas expedition temporarily based on Scotland to defend the British Isles, will be appalled by the latest 3 dispatch from Glasgow. As widely printed in the Scullsh press here. this report informs us of incredible news about bagpipes tbagpipcs. for some reason. al- ways being news among the non- Scottish races - envy, no doubll. Some upstart .b:-igplpc makers in Pakistan are selling their products at half the price properly demand- ed by the genuine. old-time manu- facturucrs of Glasgow. Any Scolsnian -- I speak. iiatur ally. as a humble member of that race who is slowly and rcluctaiitly becoming a Canadian against hiw will - must be appalled at the threatened Pakistani invasion of the hagpipe market. Was it for this final humiliation that Scotland fought at Flannockburn and count- less Scotsmen throughout the world have endured the rigors of Burns Night? A GRAVE SUBJECT g Thai is a subject ton grave for discussion be fo r e a Canad- ian people which. statistically at least, grows alarmingly less Scot- tish all the time. Of more concern . is the rumbling of rebellion among the non-Scots of Canada. These misguided Canadians. I judge. are beginning in feel their oats. a foodstuff. as Dr Johnson remarked, intended for the con sumption of Sculsmen only. or horses in England. The Ottawa Journal, for iiistance, under a rather tliin disgiiise has lately veiilurcd to raise its voice against Scottish domination. The Voice lS 0lIl.V a whisper yet but this sort of treason is catching among the ignorant. The .lutirii.'il'.s fifth culiimii is iii- troduccd through the u.su:il form. ula. now so taiiiiliar as to rlt-ccivr nobody. llciiiarkiug on the appoint- ment of auotlicr Scotsman to a high position. the editor goes on to enu- merate such eminent Scntsmrn Is John A. .ll:i(-donald. Donald Smith. George Slcplien and many more who. as Mr all know. built C;-liluda slngleliandcd without any assist. once from anybody and entirely against the opposition of the Can- adians. FAINT PRAISE The Journlil lriiiilly praiscs these great figures, vcry faiiilly it dare not bring the (Tanadian llesislaiii-r ion system is controlled by a Gor- ' national treasury . don and the wears Harris lwecds, I suppose we can consider ourselves reasonably safe. Our wise policy. as larcady prov- ed by the conquest of England, is to encourage the natives within rea- son, not to offend their queer in- digenous customs unnecessarily and. in short. to use our power Indeed, I would go so far as to say that we should not even force bagpipes on a nation obviously not yet fit to receive them. We can wait. Nevertheless. if the Pakistanis try to force foreigh bagpipes on us. if the Canadian press lecrs at this sacrilcge and The Journal . presumes to deliver 8 corny lect- ure in Englsh - truly an alien corn - we Scots may grow tired of it all and refuse to manage Canada any longer. We may have to turn it over to the Pakistasis who seem to care I boot or two for higher things. i . ON THE TOMBS IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY Mortality. behold and fear! What a change of flesh is here! Think how many rnyal bones Sleep wiiliin this heap of stones: Here they lie had realms and lands. Who now want strength to stir their hands: Where from with dust They preach. in greatness is no trust.' Here's an acre sown indeed With the richest, royal'st seed That the earth did elcr suck in Since the first man died for sin: Here the bones of birth have cried- 'Though gods they were, as men they died.' Here are sands. igiinble things, Dropt from the ruin'd sides of king Here's a world of pump and state, Buried in dust. once dead by fate. --Francis Beaumont tl5tlli- lfiitil their pulpits sealls England's Second Mayflower National Geographic Bullemi Hewu from stout English oak, I new Mayflower is slowly taking shape in I British shipyard. Devonshire shipwright: in the lit- tle Channel port of Brixham east of Plymouth. turning their crafts- manship back three and a half centuries. are reproducing the his- toric vessel of the Pilgrims. the National Geographic Socelty re- ports. In July they laid her oaken keel. Next July. if all goes well. the second Mayflower will sail on I two-month crossing to the "stern and rock-bound coast" of New Eng- land. Its crew and passengers, many of them Mayflower descend- ants. will land in garb of the Pur- itans of 1620. GESTURE OF FRIENDSHIP Gesture of friendship to the United States. the project is fin- anccd entirely by voluntary con- trlbutions in Britain. Long research by historians on both sides of the Atlantic guides the work. Little is known of one of the most famous ships ever to sail the Atlantic. No precise records, specifications. or descriptions aur- iivc. nor any known painting or . sketch of the ”flne ship." as Puri- I tain de into the open just yet. But any i Scotsman can see what is under way. When the pi-uple of Pakistan pre- sume to make bagpipes. or a fat-. iimile of the same when Canadians begin to murmur aloud about their betters. it is high time to consider where we are going. Ami high time also for Canadians to consider how well we Scots have treated - them. A part from a few hanlqui-ts, an occasional liaizgis and other atrocit- ies unavoidable in such I struggle we have treated the c....adi.,.,; Drcttv handsomely. Despite our un. dmllflefl Dower. niir rule has been benevolent on the whole, Why several of our prime min. titers were not even Scotsman and we never complained. Today you will find banks in remote places whose managers actually hear 1:" izlish names. This Is certainly a dlsfurblnl trend. likely to under. mine confidence in the banking system and full of peril to the mitional economy. hilt we have lie. t-opted it philosophically. Rf-IASONABLY SAFE -So lrmfl as half our trInsportIl- DIES UNNOTICED SMITHERS, B. C. (CPI - AI and Indian womnn apparently died unnoticed in I I dslde ditch near here as police worked over Iiiolher accident victim neIrby. The Md! of Mn. Adeline Jimmy. Mwufoundnbouttoboin-Infur the Iccldent. RCMP IIIII tbIh,iI- Veltintlon of the midnight nu. t'l:-athtalled to disclose I need Robert Cushman des- cribed the Mayflower. Christoper Jones WI! her mast- ' er. I native of Rotherhithe beside London's Thames. She was likely a I80-ton vessel, fair size for her day, broad-waisted. with high superstructure: or "cuties" fore and aft. Yet for the poverty-bound Purit- ans in Holland exile to have If- fordcd her, the Mayflower in ism must have been I somewhuf de- Prcmt and ordinary old merchant- man. She bore In ordinary name; there were some I) MIyflowern irmddmlfllly registry Ibout. thIt e. The, sllln now bulldln It Brin- liam ll patterned on the most are ful models of Illipl of Moyflovm-'1 type and tonnage. NIVII hhtorlnu Assume that Chrlstoper Jonu'I vu- sel was iitnut and chunky. 90 feet l" aver-all Ienniii. all real in mm", II feet in depth of hold. with three masts to have been cllm I "llllp." two nf them square-riguad. OTTAWA ICP) -. Production of Canadian moun- She was jammed to overflowing with her 102 Pilgrims (the new Mayflower will take only 50, plus a crew of 21!. William Bradford's jnuriial tells that the voyage was rough, cold, and stormy. There was much seasickiiess. hilt only one passenger died. young William Butten. This remarkable record points to the probability that the May- flower was a "sweet" ship. her bilizcs iicli disinfected by leakage from wine kegs during years of trailing with Bordeaux and La Rochelle. There must have been traces about her. too. of the fish. tar. turpentine, and other smelly cargoes she hllfl carried. UNI'.N()ll'N END V What finally linppeiicd in -the first Mliyflowcr is unknown. She returned in England and in late 1621 was unloading French salt at London Captain Jones died in l522- TWO .VP8r.s llll('r, the last Admiralty record of his ship had her lying in poor condition at Roth- erhitlie. with "one suit of worn sails." valued all told at less than 8750. One marine sl-liolai' attciiiptcd to prove thnt lilayflowcr beams are part of an existing barn in the vll. lane of Jordiins. Bucklnizlianisliire, but the theory is challenged. What. ever her fate. in late 1955 the ship of the Pilgrims is coming back to life in England. The Age Old Story Ye iihnll do no unrlgliteousncas In lndsment. In mclcynrd. in weight, or in measure. Just. bal- Inces. lust weights. I just ephIh. Ild I just him. shall ye have: 1 Im the Lord your God, which brought you out of the Innd of Egypt. Therefore IIIIII ye observe Ill my statutes. and all my judl. menu. Ind llotliem: I In the lard. IIOIIIIIIIIIIIIIFOIIIIIDIOOQIQIOIIIIIIOOOODOOIIC . Medically Speaking by Herman N. Bunions. M. D. MAKING HEALTH A HABIT Health and beIuty go hand in hand. Most of you want them above all else. And that's perfectly 513' ui-II beeIu.se with heIlt.h and beauty you can Ittlrln nearly any- thing you desire. Reducing will better you at)- pcarance, if you're overweight. and also improve your health. BUOYANT HEALTH While you can lose weight in I relatively short time. you can't build radiant, buoyant health in just a couple of weeks. Only by proper living and eating on I lifetime basis can you maintain good health. All of us, regardles of age. need some fats. They furnish en- ergy and help keep your body warm. Some even serve as vita- min carriers. And unsaturated, fatty acids. substances contained in fats. can- not be manufactured by your body. but must be eaten. The teeii-age set has higher energy requirements than older persons. Any substance which is doubly important during the growing age. If youiigsters are denied es- sential fatty acids. or don't get enough of them. their nails be- come brittle. their hair becomes dry and their skin becomes scaly. Frequently. definite disorders such as eczema might result. As you grow older, however. it's best to cut down on fats. QUESTION AND ANSWER C. T.: I have poor circulation. Could this be caused by I thyroid condition? Answer: Sometimes I lack of thyroid hormone may be at fault in circulatory difficulties. How- elcr, this is not often the case. '-Idle lvioney (Financial Post) l Eleven million dollars that might be put to useful work is lying idle in an Ottawa bank and there it may remain for severul years. This is money received by Canadian companies from the sale of obsolete wartime ocean-going ships. The vessels were bought from the Federal Government after the war under certain conditions. Chief of these conditions was that when the ships were sold the money re- ceived was to be held for up to five years in I special account or until used for icplncement by mod- ern ships. The Idea of course was to perpetuate I Canadian deep seI merchant marine. . Under present uncertain condit- ions. Canadian ship owners are reluctant to rclnvcst in deep sea shipping. They claim that they can- not compcte with much more cheaply operated and sometimes heavily subsidized foreign lines. They also claim that they don't know what policy the Canadian Government may adopt to deal with the situation. In the mean- time. the old wartime ships have been sold. but the funds received are tied up. Only I government decision. favorable or otherwise to the con- tinuance of I Canadian merchant marine, can clear up this matter. If this money is never going to be put into new shipping then it should be releaud for other investment. Ottawa. of course, can hIrdly be expected to make up its mind on ocean shipping until the present royal commission on oastal and inland shipping has completed Ila work. Once that matter has been cleared up. however. I clearcut statement of intention: should be forthcoming promptly. Glasses For Turkeys (GIII Reporter) . Among new invention: there have appeared small rose colored glasses to be worn by turkeys. Poa- sibly the approach of fall made inventors conscious of Thanksgiv- ing Ind Chi-lstmu with all im- plications. But the guns thIt the rose colored glasses Ire for cheer- ing up the turkeys. soon to meet their doom. is explained II III wrong. True. the purpose is related to the turkey'I (Ito It the forthcom- ing festivals, but it ll explIined by theinvcntor I! having to be chiefly with another matter entirely. The" spectacles. he says. change the normal angle of vision and prevent the turkeys from fighting I NOTES isv Pogo 4 The Guardian. THE WAY Q to carry out in I democracy. Too vital place the Opposition occupies in the British parliamentary sys- tem and how much the country loses when the oppositiun is un- able to function owing to lack of power. lack of numbers. or both. -Red Deer Advocate. Fonnu French Premier Men- des-France waged quite a cam- paign to persuade the people to drink more milk. Perhaps we need something like it in Canada. too; statistics show that from 1945 to 1953, consumption of milk in Can- ada declined from l.02 pints per person per day to .86 pints. -Corn- wall Standard-riecholde . Among the more elegant conven- iences of our vanished yesterdays was the walking cane. They were the symbol in the pre-automotive age of a more humanistic attitude toward life. of a period when time had more meaning and a man was not afraid to pause and observe the passing show his fellows pro- vided.-Hamilton Spectator. Some important officials in Wash- ington already are tiring of the "be kind to Communists" line of present international policy. More and more. opinion is expressed by officials in private that it In I mistake to open doors once closed to Communists just because the Kremlin no longer talks tough. British officials. too, feel that top- level American officials are being taken in too much by the new Communist line. -U. S. News and World Report. According to the finding of I re- cent survey. conducted in the U.S. but .. LA .. .. .. to Cam Ida, the presence in I commuii ity of 100 industrial workers creates I demand for 260 other jobs of I wide variety. To supply the de- mands of each 100 employees in I manufacturing plant, it was found that there are needed, be- sides others 28.5 farmers, 2.5 shoe clerks, 2.2 miners, one nurse. 2.2 stenographers, 13 food clerks. .13 entertainers. and .25 editors and reporters. And anyone who does not think that one quarter. or .25 of an editor or I reptrter is im- portant hasn't tried to get out I newspaper. --The Printed Word. x Chief Justice Mckuer. of the On- tario Supreme Court. addressing the graduating class It Osgoode Hall. criticized the press for inter- fering in the legal process. At least that is what we think he said. His actual words were: "Modern met- hods of communication h Iv e brought the pressure of customs foreign to our ideals of legal cult- ure and legal rights that demands eternal vigilance to preserve the rights of the individual to I fail- trlal of his use before the courts." Whatever the press doesit never uses language in this fashion. Though what we say may be wrong. It least the public understands it. -Kingston Whig-Standard. There Is something essentially wholesome in the statement of Frederic de Wilde from Hollywood, that centre which so frequently seeks to manufacture "wholesome- ness" as I commercial product. Mr. de Wilde is the father of child actor Brandon de Wilde. and he has announced the retirement of the boy star of "Shane" and "Mem- ber of the Wedding" at the In of 13. "We didn't care about I cIreer for him". the father said. "We cared more about his character development . . . . . We think our Ion is normal. He's really not im- pressed with his aucceu." An ob- ject lesion in sane parenthood hu emerged from I most unlikely centre. The cheers for young Bruidon and for his father may be less noisy than those for other child star: and their parents, but they will be infinitely more uln- Tbe opposition bu I VTIII min i many people fall to realize t.he' i W I to f I VII in I It in which vunon will :3 ii'."e"1' be hastily bypassed around it: lour eastern provinces in ordei that their transcontinental tum should begin It Montreal. in in. structure of I future Canada iii. Atlantic Provinces should be a fair front porch and not a litter of empty packing cases in the door. yard. -Fredericton Gleaner. The other day when some iiiinu, culprit expressed indignation me; a thr 22': sentence, the mag. istrate promptly doubled the ,,..... ally. Perhaps. as the niaglsti-at. warned. the heavier sentence wag Justified in the first case. However when justice is administered on file, installment plan in this way. many people are likely to feel that the original crime had little to do lllih git! extra three months.-Finaiiciai out. How much does it cost to get . job? A silly question? Not at 311, Every job costs someone a lot or money. If it is I job in industry. the price tag is usually very high By this we mean that before jobs can be created in industry, some. body has to put up I lot of money, The Machinery and Allied Products Institute. which has studied this matter. figures that, in the United States It takes about 311,400 In in. vestment to create I job in Amer. lcan industry. To this figure must be added some thousands of doi- lars for the land and the natural resources industry ”5"t -Gall Re- porter. our fIr northern compatriots. the Eskimos. show signs of breaking away from their Stone Age back- ground. One dIy': news tells of appointment of In Eskimo to I 2' ,, " d welfare post in Lah- rador and of In Eskimo Y0IIllI'I membership in I Winnipeg watch repair class. Both development are welcome. The more our aboriginal Canadians can be intesfliled ""0 national life, the better for them- But of the two instances cited. tech- ideal training for a young Eskimo is the less lurprislng. Men who have been in the far north report llllt Eskimos have an IP1llll'3l9 701' lil- tricate and delicate repair work on machines. It is too rich I Elli 10 lie dormant.-Windsor Star. It II Ipparent that "education" by means of safety posters and appeals to the drivers' better in- siincts has not worked. The motor- ized moron who speeds and cuts in and out of traffic isn't reading safety editorials. Roadside signs -Iaaumlng that he can read- are for the other fellow not for him. Ontario and every other pru- vlnce is some day going to be forced into drastic action to curb the ghastly Ind ever-increasing number of fatal highway accidents. Education and persuasion have failed. stringent checks on license IpplicInts, no automatic renewals and penalties that hurt rather lllflll annoy are only I few of the mea- sureli that must be adopted to halt this mounting carnage on our roads. -London Free Press. Refrigeration Bepnin To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES E SERVICE Mtlftlils Rewinding Ind Repnlrs EI.l!IOTBl0AL Berlin Palmer Electric PIIIIIIIMIIIM cere. -Victoria Times. PROFESSIONAL CARDS i BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell, Methanol I Foster 1!! Richmond at. themselves. This. ilndei-ItIndIbly. prevents undue exercise Ind the loss of poundIge Imong the birds. which sell for so much I pound. The effect of the me color '1: J. Emu-I BlIIchIrd,' ILA. III Queen at. ' PIIII Bl! ll.A.FIrm', o u..I. Innate:-3'ulbiu. OPTOMETRISTS G. l'. llufcheson & son I. G. . 0. n GrI!tII st. out 51! J. A. Osnuthol-I. B.0. 12! Int SI. .DlIl 54" h Cash 2 n Getllotolllttornol-o l'.?.'pif55f3.li'3ii'l?l'."'uicaL2iau'l'E Allison in. (link. u..n. Byron J. Grant. OJ)- lng II intended. 1; nm 3;, mg 474-; II III! It ' DIII I'll Commenting on 1Ile new scheme J S Ry”, no the St. PIui Pioneer Pl-cu cmner A. WI-Ifhu Glndot, LLB. c H l' . '5” iiiztwltiiiy Irilmiln " ting suggestion. nllllu Bldg. In (Inna I. one. .1”, I... .75. . . PIP?!" IIYI". If there is any virtue in this nIrtl- Palmer 8 IIIIIIII II. J. lhbod. B.O. Ictularbgf Viltlzildetlid. ponlbly 3”. .4 N... gun. mg. Ilolfllui P. B. I. in "ax to othnr 4 beings. How about mu the ihtlieuon. Pubs I cHlRoPRACTOR f:'ifi:'&'e mllctd? ,:fIn:thAfrIclll sill: N'”"”"”' n.- w 3. can mun gala 12.4.. .i"u.;..gu.,,,.,,M JITIIIIIIOQ Ii-nu m M”; i of” m , z-nan . ltd flhu , . . the fight out of uiomi ' um. Bldg. out an qua: ARCHITECT Club. B. M ILA. G. IOIIII ml in Ilchnlcul Ii. in-Agni I. Iu:'ttI.A.i.gi..' 2” Ihclfh I Tnlll t"htIIuIIowI. IIIIIIJI 0' Ill QIIC II... 0?: II TrHI1l- DIII Ill cmareaso ACCOUNTANTS I Phone forl-tripioomllpon ,, '. I”-" 5”-5, 755-55 ;ick up cub. l.aIn cinloui-uilorod In " - "2 W "o W var i::.::":.:'..''.;':.' am: "”””"”"”"-"'"" ml ..a non uyqonn tom ourylbingl DlHlthn'.QV&- M. R M K: M m I W, '1 mu I-ui 021:0”: for In-Minna .:u...'1&jp - ' t ' 5 2 N '- C4. ”""" KO-I T . ' . , ; ILIJIOANIU , ion-cannon-nah. , l is . -' I I nu-luv . 3- ” 0.0-M" . .-C. 3'" W75.- 4 13 7 ' I - W -- MC tauIutuI&'dI I 11